Experimental Phenomenology by Don Ihde

An Introduction

A sustained argument for treating lived experience itself as a domain for disciplined, repeatable investigation, offering concrete procedures and examples for varying perceptual situations—changes of posture, attention, sensory emphasis and other small “experiments” in experience—to make visible the structures of perception, embodiment, intentionality and temporality; the work proposes a method of careful description and controlled variation that bridges descriptive phenomenology with a more empirical, practice-oriented stance and clarifies how subjects relate to objects, senses and mediating technologies in situated experience.

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